diff --git a/src/site/_includes/survey/choices.njk b/src/site/_includes/survey/choices.njk index b19b27280..9490c69ee 100644 --- a/src/site/_includes/survey/choices.njk +++ b/src/site/_includes/survey/choices.njk @@ -535,10 +535,10 @@
We asked about an enormous number of frameworks—over 30 of them. Visualizing so many frameworks at once is a challenge, so we split them into two groups: Major frameworks, where the cut-off is at least 10% usage, and then minor frameworks, where usage is less than 10% (keep in mind, developers use multiple frameworks and could mark all the frameworks they used, so these percentages add up to well over 100%).
-The major frameworks have a lot of surprises. React is dominant, as it has been for a long time, and its satisfaction score remains high. Vue has higher satisfaction but roughly half the usage.
+The major frameworks have a lot of surprises. React is the most frequent choice, as it has been for a long time, and its satisfaction score remains high. Vue has higher satisfaction but roughly half the usage.
Next.js has stellar satisfaction and is really big these days, and Nuxt.js is a little smaller. If you were looking for a safe pick for a new kitchen-sink framework based on this data, Next or Nuxt are where to go.
The big legacy frameworks, jQuery and Express, aren’t going anywhere. But with a satisfaction score below 1.0, jQuery users seem to wish it would.
Relative newcomers Svelte and 11ty are doing very well, with 11ty continuing a strong showing despite relatively low awareness. Early-ish adopters, check these out.
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